Ma (Javanese)
ꦩ is one of the syllables in Javanese script that represents the sound /mɔ/, /ma/. It is transliterated to Latin as "ma", and sometimes in Indonesian orthography as "mo". It has another form (pasangan), which is ◌꧀ꦩ, but represented by a single Unicode code point, U+A9A9.[1][2][3]
ꦩ | |
ma | |
Aksara nglegena | Aksara pasangan |
---|---|
Javanese script | |
Latin orthography | ma |
Phoneme | [m] |
Unicode | U+A9A9 |
Pasangan
It's pasangan form ◌꧀ꦩ, is located on the bottom side of the previous syllable. For example, ꦲꦤꦏ꧀ꦩꦕꦤ꧀ - anak macan (little tiger).
Murda
The letter ꦩ doesn't have a murda form.
Glyphs
Nglegena forms | Pasangan forms | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ꦩ ma | ꦩꦃ mah | ꦩꦁ mang | ꦩꦂ mar | ◌꧀ꦩ -ma | ◌꧀ꦩꦃ -mah | ◌꧀ꦩꦁ -mang | ◌꧀ꦩꦂ -mar |
ꦩꦺ me | ꦩꦺꦃ meh | ꦩꦺꦁ meng | ꦩꦺꦂ mer | ◌꧀ꦩꦺ -me | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦃ -meh | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦁ -meng | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦂ -mer |
ꦩꦼ mê | ꦩꦼꦃ mêh | ꦩꦼꦁ mêng | ꦩꦼꦂ mêr | ◌꧀ꦩꦼ -mê | ◌꧀ꦩꦼꦃ -mêh | ◌꧀ꦩꦼꦁ -mêng | ◌꧀ꦩꦼꦂ -mêr |
ꦩꦶ mi | ꦩꦶꦃ mih | ꦩꦶꦁ ming | ꦩꦶꦂ mir | ◌꧀ꦩꦶ -mi | ◌꧀ꦩꦶꦃ -mih | ◌꧀ꦩꦶꦁ -ming | ◌꧀ꦩꦶꦂ -mir |
ꦩꦺꦴ mo | ꦩꦺꦴꦃ moh | ꦩꦺꦴꦁ mong | ꦩꦺꦴꦂ mor | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦴ -mo | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦴꦃ -moh | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦴꦁ -mong | ◌꧀ꦩꦺꦴꦂ -mor |
ꦩꦸ mu | ꦩꦸꦃ muh | ꦩꦸꦁ mung | ꦩꦸꦂ mur | ◌꧀ꦩꦸ -mu | ◌꧀ꦩꦸꦃ -muh | ◌꧀ꦩꦸꦁ -mung | ◌꧀ꦩꦸꦂ -mur |
ꦩꦿ mra | ꦩꦿꦃ mrah | ꦩꦿꦁ mrang | ꦩꦿꦂ mrar | ◌꧀ꦩꦿ -mra | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦃ -mrah | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦁ -mrang | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦂ -mrar |
ꦩꦿꦺ mre | ꦩꦿꦺꦃ mreh | ꦩꦿꦺꦁ mreng | ꦩꦿꦺꦂ mrer | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺ -mre | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦃ -mreh | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦁ -mreng | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦂ -mrer |
ꦩꦽ mrê | ꦩꦽꦃ mrêh | ꦩꦽꦁ mrêng | ꦩꦽꦂ mrêr | ◌꧀ꦩꦽ -mrê | ◌꧀ꦩꦽꦃ -mrêh | ◌꧀ꦩꦽꦁ -mrêng | ◌꧀ꦩꦽꦂ -mrêr |
ꦩꦿꦶ mri | ꦩꦿꦶꦃ mrih | ꦩꦿꦶꦁ mring | ꦩꦿꦶꦂ mrir | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦶ -mri | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦶꦃ -mrih | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦶꦁ -mring | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦶꦂ -mrir |
ꦩꦿꦺꦴ mro | ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦃ mroh | ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦁ mrong | ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦂ mror | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦴ -mro | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦃ -mroh | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦁ -mrong | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦺꦴꦂ -mror |
ꦩꦿꦸ mru | ꦩꦿꦸꦃ mruh | ꦩꦿꦸꦁ mrung | ꦩꦿꦸꦂ mrur | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦸ -mru | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦸꦃ -mruh | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦸꦁ -mrung | ◌꧀ꦩꦿꦸꦂ -mrur |
ꦩꦾ mya | ꦩꦾꦃ myah | ꦩꦾꦁ myang | ꦩꦾꦂ myar | ◌꧀ꦩꦾ -mya | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦃ -myah | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦁ -myang | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦂ -myar |
ꦩꦾꦺ mye | ꦩꦾꦺꦃ myeh | ꦩꦾꦺꦁ myeng | ꦩꦾꦺꦂ myer | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺ -mye | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦃ -myeh | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦁ -myeng | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦂ -myer |
ꦩꦾꦼ myê | ꦩꦾꦼꦃ myêh | ꦩꦾꦼꦁ myêng | ꦩꦾꦼꦂ myêr | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦼ -myê | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦼꦃ -myêh | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦼꦁ -myêng | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦼꦂ -myêr |
ꦩꦾꦶ myi | ꦩꦾꦶꦃ myih | ꦩꦾꦶꦁ mying | ꦩꦾꦶꦂ myir | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦶ -myi | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦶꦃ -myih | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦶꦁ -mying | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦶꦂ -myir |
ꦩꦾꦺꦴ myo | ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦃ myoh | ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦁ myong | ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦂ myor | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦴ -myo | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦃ -myoh | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦁ -myong | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦺꦴꦂ -myor |
ꦩꦾꦸ myu | ꦩꦾꦸꦃ myuh | ꦩꦾꦸꦁ myung | ꦩꦾꦸꦂ myur | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦸ -myu | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦸꦃ -myuh | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦸꦁ -myung | ◌꧀ꦩꦾꦸꦂ -myur |
Unicode block
Javanese script was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 2009 with the release of version 5.2.
Javanese[1][2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) | ||||||||||||||||
0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+A98x | ꦀ | ꦁ | ꦂ | ꦃ | ꦄ | ꦅ | ꦆ | ꦇ | ꦈ | ꦉ | ꦊ | ꦋ | ꦌ | ꦍ | ꦎ | ꦏ |
U+A99x | ꦐ | ꦑ | ꦒ | ꦓ | ꦔ | ꦕ | ꦖ | ꦗ | ꦘ | ꦙ | ꦚ | ꦛ | ꦜ | ꦝ | ꦞ | ꦟ |
U+A9Ax | ꦠ | ꦡ | ꦢ | ꦣ | ꦤ | ꦥ | ꦦ | ꦧ | ꦨ | ꦩ | ꦪ | ꦫ | ꦬ | ꦭ | ꦮ | ꦯ |
U+A9Bx | ꦰ | ꦱ | ꦲ | ꦳ | ꦴ | ꦵ | ꦶ | ꦷ | ꦸ | ꦹ | ꦺ | ꦻ | ꦼ | ꦽ | ꦾ | ꦿ |
U+A9Cx | ꧀ | ꧁ | ꧂ | ꧃ | ꧄ | ꧅ | ꧆ | ꧇ | ꧈ | ꧉ | ꧊ | ꧋ | ꧌ | ꧍ | ꧏ | |
U+A9Dx | ꧐ | ꧑ | ꧒ | ꧓ | ꧔ | ꧕ | ꧖ | ꧗ | ꧘ | ꧙ | ꧞ | ꧟ | ||||
Notes |
gollark: "Interesting" and highly cursed: Google appear to have implemented some sort of horrible BASIC-y language encoded in YAML for "cloud workflows": https://cloud.google.com/workflows/docs/reference/syntax
gollark: I don't really know about the details at all, but I think the way it works is that when you observe one end, it collapses into one of two random states, and the other one collapses into the other. Or something vaguely like that.
gollark: It doesn't allow FTL communications.
gollark: Faster than light communication would break causality though, which is bad.
gollark: There's no real way to know if it could be made since there aren't really very detailed theories of operation for them.
References
- Campbell, George L. Compendium of the World's Languages. Vol. 1. New York: Routledge, 2000.
- Soemarmo, Marmo. "Javanese Script." Ohio Working Papers in Linguistics and Language Teaching 14.Winter (1995): 69-103.
- Daniels, Peter T and William Bright. The World's Writing Systems. Ed. Peter T Daniels and William Bright. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.
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